Australia to protect Barrier Reef by banning coal mine
05 Aug 2022
CANBERRA: Australia's
new government announced on Thursday it plans to prevent the development of a
coal mine due to the potential impact on the nearby Great Barrier Reef.
Environment
Minister Tanya Plibersek said she intends to deny approval for the Central
Queensland Coal Project to be excavated northwest of the Queensland state town
of Rockhampton.
The
minority Greens party has been pressing the centre-left Labor Party government,
which was elected in May, to refuse approvals of coal or gas projects, to help
reduce Australia's greenhouse gas emissions.
"Based
on the information available to me at this stage, I believe that the project
would be likely to have unacceptable impacts on the Great Barrier Reef Marine
Park, and the values of the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area and National
Heritage Place," Plibersek said in a statement.
The
marine park manages the network of more than 2,500 reefs that cover 348,000
square kilometres (134,000 square miles) of the seabed off the northeast
Australian coast.
The
World Heritage Area, designated by the United Nations and Australia's National
Heritage List, includes natural, historic and Indigenous places of outstanding
significance to the nation.
UNESCO,
the UN cultural organisation, is considering downgrading the Great Barrier
Reef's World Heritage status mainly because rising ocean temperatures are
killing coral. The mine's proponents have 10 business days to respond to the
proposed refusal before the minister makes her final decision.
The
Greens welcomed the news and urged the minister to reject another 26 planned
coal mines.
"Now
we need an across-the-board moratorium on all new coal and gas
projects," Greens leader Adam Bandt said in a statement.
The
proposed decision was announced after the House of Representatives passed a
bill that would enshrine in law the government's ambition to reduce Australia's
greenhouse gas emissions by 43 per cent below 2005 levels by the end of
the decade.
The
bill was passed 89 votes to 55. The previous government's target had been a
reduction of between 26 per cent-28 per cent, set at the Paris climate
conference in 2015.
A
proposed Greens' amendment that would have acknowledged no new coal, oil or gas
projects could be started if Australia were to achieve its net-zero emissions target
by 2050 was defeated on Thursday.
The
government is confident that the bill will be passed by the Senate next month
with support from all 12 Greens senators, who would prefer a 2030 target of a
75 per cent reduction.
The
apparently doomed mine would have been an open-cut operation that extracted up
to 10 million metric tons (11 million US tons) of coal a year.